Quebec Election: Liberal Leader Defends Party Organization as Candidate Drops Out

Quebec Election: Liberal Leader Defends Party Organization as Candidate Drops Out
Quebec Liberal Party Leader Dominique Anglade speaks during a question and answer session at a youth conference while on a election campaign stop in Montreal, Sept. 17, 2022. The Canadian Press/Graham Hughes
The Canadian Press
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Quebec Liberal Leader Dominique Anglade said Sunday she still in the province’s election race to win, despite questions about her party’s organization and claims by other leaders that the election has become a two-way race that’s left her on the sidelines.

One Liberal candidate’s registration was denied by Élections Québec, while another pulled out of the race Saturday evening.

The party has also been dogged through much of the campaign by questions about mathematical errors in its costed platform.

“We have had certain challenges, but all the parties have also had some, so now, we’re continuing the election campaign, we have propositions to make to Quebecers,” Anglade told reporters in Shawinigan, Que., Sunday.

Anglade said she still has two weeks left to convince Quebecers of her message, adding she’s particularly looking forward to the second leader’s debate on Thursday.

The Liberal party will challenge the decision by the election regulator to refuse Harley Lounsbury’s candidacy in the riding of Matane-Matapédia, she said, but would not go into detail about why his paperwork was refused.

Regarding the candidacy of Malek Arab, Anglade said only that he pulled out of the race for personal reasons but another candidate has already been found to replace him in the Joliette riding.

On Saturday, Québec solidaire spokesman Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois described the election as increasingly a two-way race between his left-of centre party and the incumbent Coalition Avenir Québec.
A Leger poll released last week showed the Liberals in second place, at 18 percent, with Québec solidaire one percentage point behind and the Conservative Party of Quebec at 15 percent.

“It is not for our opponents to define who will be chosen by Quebecers,” Anglade said. “I think that for a young politician, Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois does quite a bit of old politics.”

Conservative Party of Quebec Leader Éric Duhaime told reporters that while it may be a two-way race between Québec solidaire and the CAQ in some downtown Montreal neighbourhoods, that’s not the case in other parts of the province.
“I think it’s time for Mr. Nadeau-Dubois to go outside of Montreal and look at what’s happening in Quebec,” he said during a campaign stop in Nicolet, Que., adding that in several parts of the province, it’s a two-way race between his party and the CAQ.
While speaking to reporters in Saguenay, Que., Parti Québécois Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon—whose party has consistently polled in fifth place—maintained the election remains a five-way race.
By Jacob Serebrin